Love Destiny aired in spring 2018 and took Thailand by storm. Sequels are already in the works and the show has even re-aired with additional scenes. Keep reading to find out what makes this lakorn so special.

Present Perfect is an short indie film from 2014 about a single women who must take care of her niece for a few days while her sister travels to Singapore for work. Written and directed by the man behind last year’s hit movie Bad Genius.

Today I’m starting a new type of Thai film review that is written specifically for Thai language students. If you’re interested in watching Thai movies to help reinforce vocabulary or grammar, you can read more below!

The ไหว้ (waiF) is the Thai equivalent of the handshake. It’s a polite greeting that you will use on a daily basis in Thailand and you will impress many if you can do a ไหว้ the correct way. The basic action is to place your hands (palms together) in front of your body. Many foreigners fail to learn the proper greeting based on the age and status of the other person, and learning the correct way to wai will impress many Thais that you meet (and maybe save you some embarrassment too)!

Thai is famous for being a troublesome for many Westerners – it has tones, a unique alphabet, and grammar that is quite different than English. Let’s take a look at how difficult it is to learn Thai based on studies from the U.S. Foreign Service Institute (FSI)!

If you’re learning Thai and want a little extra listening practice, watching TV or movies with Thai audio is a relaxing way to passively reinforce vocab and grammar that you’ve already learned. Up until recently Netflix had some of their original content dubbed and subtitled in Thai but it wasn’t available for anyone outside of Thailand. They recently started opening up their Thai language options to all of their subscribers, but you’ve got to jump through a few hoops to find it. Here’s a step-by-step guide!

Many Thai language learners start out by learning how to speak the basics. If you ask these people why they aren’t learning the Thai alphabet, you’ll hear a lot of common myths such as “it’s not important to read Thai” or “the Thai script is too difficult.” I avoided the Thai script like the plague and spent the first 6 months only using transcriptions. Once I finally sat down and spent a weekend learning how to read I thought “that’s it?” It’s really not so difficult!